Description

Longfellow Bridge is a combination railway and highway bridge. It is 105 feet (32 m) wide, 1,767 feet 6 inches (538.73 m) long between abutments, and nearly one-half mile in length, including abutments and approaches. It consists of eleven steel arch spans supported on ten masonry piers and two massive abutments. The arches vary in length from 101 feet 6 inches (30.94 m) at the abutments to 188 feet 6 inches (57.45 m) at the center, and in rise from 8 feet 6 inches (2.59 m) to 26 feet 6 inches (8.08 m). Headroom under the central arch is 26 feet (7.9 m) at mean high water.

The two large central piers, 188 feet (57 m) long and 53 feet 6 inches (16.31 m) wide,[1] feature four carved, ornamental stone towers that provide stairway access to pedestrian passageways beneath the bridge. Its sidewalks were originally both 10 feet (3.0 m) wide, but as of 2013[update], for unknown reasons, the upstream sidewalks were narrower than the downstream ones.

History

The new Cambridge Bridge viewed from Boston, sometime between 1906 and 1912. Streetcar tracks can be seen on each side, but the central rapid transit tracks are not yet in use.

The first river crossing at this site was a
ferry, first run in the 1630s.[6] The West Boston Bridge (a toll bridge) was constructed in 1793 by a group of private investors with a charter from the Commonwealth. At the time, there were only a handful of buildings in East Cambridge. The opening of the bridge caused a building boom along Main Street in Cambridge, which connected the bridge to Old Cambridge. In East Cambridge, new streets were laid out and
land was reclaimed from the swamps along the Charles River.[7] The
Cambridge and Concord Turnpike (now Broadway) was connected to the bridge's western approach around 1812. The bridge became toll-free on January 30, 1858.[8]

In 1898, the Cambridge Bridge Commission was created to construct "a new bridge across Charles River, to be known as Cambridge Bridge, at, upon, or near the site of the so-called West Boston Bridge... suitable for all the purposes of ordinary travel between said cities, and for the use of the elevated and surface cars of the
Boston Elevated Railway Company." At its first meeting on June 16, 1898,
Willam Jackson was appointed Chief Engineer; shortly afterward
Edmund M. Wheelwright was appointed Consulting Architect. Both then traveled to Europe, where they made a thorough inspection of notable bridges in France, Germany, Austria and Russia. Upon their return, they prepared studies of various types of bridges, including bridges of stone and steel arch spans.

The predecessor West Boston Bridge, circa 1864.

Although both state and national regulations at the time required a
draw bridge, it became evident that a bridge without a draw would be cheaper, better-looking, and avoid disruption to traffic. The state altered its regulations accordingly, and after the War Department declined to follow suit, the United States Congress drew up an act permitting the bridge, which President
William McKinley signed on March 29, 1900. Construction began in July 1900; the bridge opened to traffic in August 1906,[9] and was formally dedicated on July 31, 1907.[10][1]

Wheelwright had been inspired by the 1893
Columbian Exposition and was attempting to emulate the great bridges of
Europe. Four large piers of the bridge are ornamented with the prows of
Viking ships, carved in granite. They refer to a
purported voyage by
Leif Eriksson up the Charles River circa 1000 AD, as promoted by Harvard professor
Eben Horsford. The piers are also decorated with the city seals of Boston and Cambridge.

The main piers have sculptures that represent the prows of
Viking ships.

There are pedestrian stairs on both sides of the bridge at both ends adorned with stone towers. Originally, these led to the Charles River shoreline, and on the Cambridge side they still do. On the Boston side, the construction of
Storrow Drive in 1950-51 moved the shoreline, so that the stairs now lead to isolated parcels of land cut off from the river by Storrow Drive. There is no way to exit the upstream parcel, due to an off-ramp; the downstream one includes a crosswalk past another off-ramp. To reach the
Charles River Esplanade, pedestrians must now proceed along the sidewalk to the end of the bridge, and use the
Frances Appleton Bridge, a wheelchair-accessible
pedestrian bridge, at
Charles Circle slightly south of the Longfellow Bridge.

Until 1952, the central road traffic lanes of the bridge also contained tracks which connected what is now known as the
Blue Line, running from crossovers at the Cambridge end from the
Red Line tracks, across the bridge and into Boston to the North Russell Street Incline of the Blue Line subway. Before the Blue Line's Orient Heights yard was built, major repairs to that line's trains were performed at the former
Eliot Square carbarns in Cambridge. For more details on this historic Red/Blue Line connection, see
Blue Line (MBTA)#History.[14]

Neglect and rehabilitation

The Longfellow Bridge, like many bridges in the Commonwealth,[15] deteriorated into a state of disrepair. Between 1907 and 2011, the only major maintenance conducted on the bridge had been a small 1959 rehabilitation project and some lesser repairs done in 2002.[16]

On May 1, 2007, a fire broke out under the bridge, ignited by an unextinguished cigarette. The fire caused the bridge to be shut down to vehicle and train traffic,[17] and also severed
Internet2 connectivity to Boston, causing problems with the Chicago-New York OC-192 route, according to the Internet2 blog.[18]

In the summer of 2008, two state employees stole 2,347 feet (715 m) of decorative iron trim that had been removed from the bridge for refurbishment, and sold it for
scrap. The men, one of whom was a Department of Conservation and Recreation district manager, were charged with receiving $12,147 for the historic original parapet coping. The estimated cost to remake the pieces, scheduled for replication by 2012, was over $500,000.[19] The men were later convicted in September 2009.[20]

Also that summer, the western sidewalk and inner traffic lane were both closed, the
Red Line subway was limited to 10 miles per hour (16 km/h), and Fourth-of-July fireworks-watchers were banned from the bridge, all because of concerns that the bridge might collapse under the weight and vibration of heavy use.[6] The speed restriction was lifted in August 2008, and the lane and sidewalk were reopened later on.

On August 4, 2008 Governor
Deval Patrick signed into law a $3 billion Massachusetts bridge repair funding package he had sponsored.[21] Bond funds were to be used to pay for the rehabilitation of the Longfellow, with a preliminary cost estimate of $267.5 million.[22] If bridge maintenance had instead been performed regularly, the total estimated historical cost would have been about $81 million.[23] Design began in Spring 2005; construction was expected to begin in Spring 2012 and end in Spring 2016.[22]

Emergency repairs

Emergency repairs underway, July 2011

The condition of the bridge was determined to be so bad that the state could not wait for development of a full restoration plan. A $17 million contract was signed with SPS New England Inc for interim repairs.[25] Crews began work in August 2010 that involved improving sidewalks on the approaches to bring them up to
ADA compliance. In March 2011, crews began structural inspections for Phase II and cleaning of the stone masonry piers. MassDOT announced in May 2011 that work would begin on stripping and cleaning rust from steel arch ribbons that had not been painted since 1953. Crews were to apply
paint primer to the arch ribbons and evaluate them for future major rehabilitation. All work was expected to be completed by December 2011.[26]

Major reconstruction project

Woman adds trophy to collection under the Longfellow Bridge in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

A $255 million project started construction in the summer of 2013 to replace structural elements of the bridge, and restore its historic character.[27] The project was expected to require at least 25 weekend shutdowns of MBTA Red Line subway service to accommodate construction, including multiple temporary relocations of the rapid transit tracks.[28] Outbound road traffic (from Boston to Cambridge) was to be detoured from the bridge for all three years of expected construction. A single lane of inbound traffic was expected to be available for the duration of the project, potentially restricted to buses-only at certain hours. A
computer animation movie released by MassDOT showed the complex six-stage rehabilitation process in great detail, including temporary installation of a "shoo-fly track" (bypass track) to allow the permanent railbed at the midline of the span to be rebuilt.[29]

The design/build phase of the bridge was assigned to the joint venture team of contractors White-Skanska-Conslgli under supervision by MassDOT.[30] Bridge Architect
Miguel Rosales of Boston-based transportation architects Rosales + Partners provided the conceptual design, bridge architecture, and aesthetic lighting design. Preliminary design engineering was performed by
Jacobs Engineering.
STV, Inc. is the final design engineer and engineer of record. The design provides for widened sidewalks and bike lanes,[27][28] with two motor vehicle lanes inbound (towards Boston), but only a single lane outbound (towards Cambridge).[31]

The Longfellow Bridge Restoration and Rehabilitation project was scheduled for completion in 2016, but the completion date was extended to December 2018, due in part to historic restoration requiring obsolete construction techniques such as
riveting.[31] In August 2016, the outbound side of the bridge was completely closed to all traffic, including pedestrians and cyclists, in order to complete work sooner. This measure was undertaken to allow the bridge to be fully reopened by June 2018.[32] After years of delays, the bridge was fully reopened on May 31, 2018[33], but portions of the project, such as replacing the pedestrian footbridge over Storrow Drive, will be completed by the fall of 2018. According to Jonathan L. Gulliver, MassDOT Highway Administrator, the total cost of the rebuilding project was $306.6 million.[34]

The Trophy Room Project

In May of 2014, an anonymous local artist started placing a collection of
trophies next to the pedestrian underpass on the Cambridge side of the bridge.[35] During the renovation of the bridge, the trophy room went on hiatus, but the installation appeared again during the summer of 2018.

During a August 2018 interview with the Boston Globe, the local artists who wanted to remain anonymous, said he was a 50 year old lawyer who decided to place the trophies after seeing an unused space under the bridge and finding a box of trophies at a local
landfill.[36]